Like each of the previous chapters in artist
Matana Roberts' projected 12-part work
Coin Coin, she uses her music as a medium. Through it she explores the gauzy intersection of folklore and history that serves as a definition of the way in which we view ourselves at the present juncture, or refuse to should we wish to remain in the darkness.
Roberts interrogates official accounts, slave narratives, her family's stories, and her identity as an African American woman; she also delves into and explodes mythologies, historic, spiritual, and cultural.
Coin Coin is not one story but many, a revelatory exploration of Blackness outside the notorious twin filters of race and class that define America.
Where
Coin Coin Chapter Three: River Run Thee was delivered completely solo,
Memphis showcases a brand-new band. This new group includes the criminally under-celebrated multi-instrumentalist and composer
Hannah Marcus on guitars, fiddle, and accordion,
Sam Shalabi on guitar and oud,
Nick Caloia on bass, and
Ryan Sawyer on drums and percussion. All members provide vocals.
Roberts speaks, sings, and plays alto saxophone and clarinet. She also engages contributions from trombonist
Steve Swell and vibraphonist
Ryan White alongside a trio of guest vocalists.
Roberts employs her usual rainbow of methods to reveal her interrogation of past and present: Spoken word, singing, narrating, playing, and directing. Musically free jazz improvisation winds through gospel, blues, folk, and field chants. Introduced by droning voices, bowed strings, clarinet, and percussion, "Jewels of the Sky: Inscription" opens the doorways between antiquity and a 21st century United States where black men and women are executed by police. Though her maternal grandmother's mugshot adorns the cover,
Roberts traces the story of an ancestor named Liddie whose father was murdered by the KKK. In "As Far as the Eye Can See," jaw harp, accordion, fiddle, and guitars frame her spoken narrative about the slippage of memory, Liddie's recollection of her father encouraging her to run as a metaphor to flee the Klan's violence and hate, of church, and segregation. In the set's longest track,
Roberts sets snippets of folk songs "Cold Frosty Morning" and "Paddy on the Turnpike" against free improvisation as a way of opening them to her thematic narration which concludes with the sung refrain from "Do Lord." In "Fit to Be Tied,"
W.C. Handy's "St. Louis Blues" is offered atop a Latin beat amid chants, moans, and free playing. "Her Mighty Waters Run" features staggered choral voices droning through the spiritual "Roll the Old Chariot." On "All Things Beautiful," abstract group improvisation clears the way for
Roberts to expressionistically narrate the Klan's violence before and after Liddie's flight: "I wish I could feel myself again/I am a child of the wind/Even daddy said soâ?¦." Like its predecessors,
Coin Coin Chapter Four: Memphis isn't "easy" to listen to, nor should it be, given the nature of what it explores and explicates. That said, it is a necessary, engaged art that bears repeated listening for its revelation to unfold and hopefully open a gateway to understanding. Arguably, it is the strongest and most compelling of the
Coin Coin releases thus far. ~ Thom Jurek